By Chris
Stirewalt
Monday,
February 20, 2023
“It
is men who wait to be selected, and not those who seek, from whom we may always
expect the most efficient service.” —The Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant
Thought
experiment: If we were free to remake the office of the presidency today, how
would we proceed?
Imagine
that Article II of the Constitution along with 12th, 20th, 22nd, and 25th
Amendments were suddenly unlocked. How would you want delegates to a new
constitutional convention to reimagine the presidency?
On this
observance of Washington’s birthday, we find that the office created for him
and defined by his two terms in very poor repair in the eyes of voters. And
could you blame them?
After
the unpardonable transgression of one president in trying to disrupt 224 years
of the peaceful transference of power—arguably the lowest point in the history
of the office—his successor appears feeble as he prepares to seek a another
term, at the conclusion of which he would be 86 years of age.
Even in
an era when the word “crisis” is so sorely abused, one would have to say that
the presidency seems to be facing just that. Even with the kingly powers
granted to and taken by its occupants, the office is unable to meet the
impossible demands of a nation that has understandably learned to mostly ignore
or disdain Congress and state governments.
A broken
system has caused power and expectations to pool up in the presidency like
syrup in the neck of an upturned bottle. Yet there is no authority great enough
nor any appetite for autocracy sufficient to give the people what they want.
Those things—domestic tranquility, liberty, opportunity, equal protection under
the law—can only be the products of a functioning republic of divided
powers.
Presidents
keep promising to do impossible, unconstitutional, and even illegal things in
reply to Americans’ frustrations with a system that often cannot execute basic
functions or respond to obvious, longstanding problems—even when broad
consensus exists for a solution. But there is, blessedly, an obvious curb on
our interest in having a strongman to break the impasse.
The
delegates to the convention that built the office of the chief executive were
fitting it to the form of Washington, whom they had just unanimously elected as
president of the body. Their inclinations toward kingship were understandable
given that the man they had in mind had proven himself to be judicious, honest,
patriotic, effective, and, most importantly, not greedy for power.
Those
attributes would not be a concern for delegates to our imaginary convention.
Rather they would ask: Could a useful presidency be built small enough to
contain the appetites of Donald Trump? Ministerial enough for Joe Biden? Having
a president of low character followed by an unsteady one allows us to clearly
see the problems with autocracy. The presidency we would invent today would
probably be too weak and too decentralized to be both head of state and head of
government.
Americans
have already turned our republican system into a jury-rigged parliamentary one
in which effective government can take place only when one party controls the
presidency and both houses of Congress. Participants in a modern convention
might make it official and give us a prime minister instead of a chief
executive. But that wouldn’t be very helpful for the world’s apex power at a
time of global instability challenges. Nor would it be a good idea to add any
new incentives for partisan tribalism.
But if
there was a Madison among the delegation, he or she might see that the biggest
problems with the presidency these days are not with the office, but its
occupants. That suggests a problem with the way they are chosen.
Many of
the delegates in our thought experiment would surely cry for the president to
be elected by one national, popular vote instead of the Electoral College. But
aside from the defect of increasing the chances that a candidate might actually
be able to succeed in stealing a future election with only one result to rig or
vandalize, a national popular vote would not do anything to improve the quality
of the people from whom voters must choose.
Before
the debate over how to decide between two candidates, delegates would first
need to consider how to choose the candidates in the first place. Given the
inability of the major parties as currently constituted to reliably pick
nominees who are both virtuous and able, it seems obvious that the most urgent
reform would be to how those nominees are selected.
No one
would design the system as we have it, in which a small percentage of voters in
a handful of states have effective control of the final choices available to
the whole nation. What we have is democratic, but hardly representative. I
don’t suggest that I know a perfect substitute, but I do know that replacing
the function of parties in picking nominees with primary elections has
established the wrong incentives. Our imaginary delegates would need to
consider a better way.
The
modern Madison might suggest “supplying, by opposite and rival interests, the
defect of better motives” and design some elegant system still rooted in our
traditions that would reward the virtues we seek in our presidents and punish
the obvious vices.
Overweening
ambition and undignified self-promotion are unworthy of Washington’s office and
of the nation its holders serve. Those baser behaviors should not be requisites
for a job that is supposed to be about courageous, sacrificial, unifying
leadership.
We do
not need a new presidency; we need a new way to select our presidents.
There
won’t be a spontaneous rewriting of Article II anytime soon, but in the coming
weeks and months as party leaders at the state and national levels—as well as
voters—shape the process that will select the next two candidates for chief
executive, they ought to imagine what a more wholesome, virtuous system would
look like.
“It
should be the highest ambition of every American to extend his views beyond
himself, and to bear in mind that his conduct will not only affect himself, his
country, and his immediate posterity;” Washington wrote not long after his
first election, “but that its influence may be coextensive with the world, and
stamp political happiness or misery on ages yet unborn.”
Just
because we have fallen short of that standard does not permit us to abandon it.
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